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THE CRBSCBNT 



PACIFIC COLLEGE 




MARCH 

1911 



D*» Geo. Latkin 

Dentist 

First National Bank Building 
Newberg, Oregon. 

Phones, Bell, Main 41 Mutual, White 31 

Chas. Lapp 

CONFECTIONER 

Hot Drinks a Specialty 

Fruits, Candies, Nuts and Soft drinks 

Parlor Pharmacy 

E. W. HODSON, Prop. 

We have the most complete line of Post 
; cards, new, clean and up-to-date. Post 
card albums, Toilet articles, Perfumes. 
Headquarters for Lowney's Candies. 

Opposite Post Office 

NEWBERG, OREGON 

Try L. E. TOWNSEND 

for Fresh Candies, Fruits, Nuts, and 
Soft Drinks. 

J. B. MOUNT 



Keeps a fine stock of Hardware, Stoves, Etc. Call and see 
when things are wanted. 



THE CRESCENT 



k VOL. XXII. MARCH, 1911 NO. 6 | 



Hope. 



When hope is gone and life wears on, 
An endless night without a dawn — 

No beauty then 

In starry skies, 

No meaning ken 

In lovers eyes — 

When hope is gone. 

Only a doom of sombre gloom. 
An empty life; the end a tomb— 

What tragic sadness 

Of farewell, 

What dearth of gladness 
Tolls out its doom. 

When hope is dead, all joys are fled 
Despair and grief hold sway instead. 

Ambition's fire 

Is drear and cold, 

Ideas inspire 

Not as of old — 

When hope is dead. 



Then give us hope and strength to cope 
With doubt, thru' which the soul must grope. 
And if at last 



2 



THE CRESCENT 



When we depart, 
Shades of the past 
Still cloy the heart, 
God give us hope! 



Wbt Mini&ttv of ftoetrp. 



(Given at State Oratorical Contest.) 

We live in a transition period in the development of 
mankind. Hence, our age has peculiar characteristics 
and grave faults. It is an age of materialism, of com- 
mercialism, of social unrest. As a result of these dis- 
eases religion is losing its vitality; art and poetry are 
being neglected, and the spirit of our people, that fund- 
amental element in human progress, is becoming viti- 
ated. We must see the destruction to which this ma- 
terialism leads. We must understand what it means to 
neglect the fruits of the spirit. 

If these evils are to be cured, we must reach the in- 
ner life of the people. There lies the real cause of them 
all. One of the best means of effecting this cure is the 
ministry of poetry. Religion and the arts are the most 
immediate expressions of this inner life and, among the 
arts, poetry is the most universal expression of what is 
noblest in the soul. Better than music, better than 
sculpture or painting, does poetry reveal the depths and 
heights and richness of the feelings and aspirations of 
the human soul. 

By common consent, religion is the noblest creation 
which emanates from the spirit of man. Religion, in 
in its primal essence is poetry, in its highest power 
made a guiding force in life. Poetry and religion are 
the omnipresent expressions of the God-seed in man. 



THE CRESCENT 



3 



They constitute his chief interest from superstitious 
savage to contemplative child of civilization. 
Witness their beginning in primitive man. To 
him the ceremonial dance is, after food, the most 
important thing in life. Gaudy with war paint, clad in 
skins of animals, he dances for days or weeks chanting 
in monotonous tones a rude prayer to the Great Spirit— 
a prayer for food or for victory over enemies. Here in 
this rude, repulsive ritual with its selfish aims we find 
the seed of these two best fruits of civilization— poetry 
and religion. But what an advance! There worship 
and song were expressed in repulsive ceremonial, with 
frenzied mind. Now man, if he be a true man, wor- 
ships God, his Father, in calm serenity and utters pro- 
found and spiritual truth in words of ravishing beauty. 

Coming, as they do, from a common source, religion 
and poetry are inseparably united. Priest and poet, 
psalmist and prophet, minister and minstrel have, as 
one brotherhood, served humanity. The religious and 
poetic seem separate only when priest becomes Pharisee 
and poet dilettante. An insipid orthodoxy is always 
unpoetic, and poetry, when paganized and purposeless, 
is irreligious. But history and individual consciousness 
show that they thrive together and are complementry. 
Dante and Petrarch, in a revival of Letters in Italy, 
make possible Luther and a reformation of Religion in 
Germany. Puritanism leaves its most enduring monu- 
ment—the incarnation of its spirit— in the poetry of 
Milton. 

Nineteenth century England gives us a notable ex- 
ample of this religious nature of poetry. The greatest 
spiritual teachers of that age were the poets— Words- 
worth, Browning, Tennyson and their compeers. These 
men, and not the tradition-bound church, turned to 



4 



THE CRESCENT 



spiritual account the new truths unearthed by science. 

For eighteen centuries, Christendom had been living 
under an ethical code far superior to that of Moses. 
Now the world was ready for scientific conceptions of 
equal superiority. Repeatedly and with increasing 
force, during those christian centuries, reason had de- 
manded recognition. Now its hopes were realized. The 
Mediaeval Church with its unreasoning, outgrown dog- 
matism could not stay its onward march. And not 
alone had unreasoning faith failed; the faithless reason 
of the age of Voltaire was like-wise insufficient. The 
new age of reason must be an age of faith and in the 
reconciliation of these two the poet-prophets performed 
their greatest service. 

This turning-point in the life of the intellect came 
with the formulation of one new idea, that of develop- 
ment or evolution. That one idea made possible a 
romantic conquest of much of the region of the unknown 
in each branch of human knowledge. But it did more 
than that— it made the old credo inadequate. Faith, 
which is essential to real progress, was giving place to 
doubt and dispair. However, the poets, mediating be- 
tween cold science and a dogmatic church, made possi- 
ble for untold thousands an adequate faith. 

Science affords only one of the means of progress in 
advancing civilization. Poetry and religion must give 
the other. There was danger, not in scientific advance, 
but in the exclusive advance of science. Darwin and 
Spencer were led into agnosticism by their exclusive 
devotion to reason. But Browning and Tennyson found 
an over-powering faith— not a faith founded on author- 
ity but on experience— their own experience. It is no 
creed or metaphysies that gives Tennyson his belief in 
immortality but his agonizing doubt and suffering after 



THE CRESCENT 



5 



the death of his friend. 

The poets in their treatment of this idea of evolu- 
tion make plain the superiority of poetry to science. To 
Darwin this is a biological theory, to Spencer a meta- 
physical one. But the poet, touching it with religious 
emotion, says, in moments of inspired insight: 

"I doubt not through the ages one increasing purpose runs" 

and 

' 'Move upward, working out the beast and let the ape and tiger die. " 
This goes beyond the inductions of mere science and 
conceives nature and man to be moving God-ward. 

Not alone in these higher speculative matters were 
our minstrels true to their calling. None attacked the 
popular evils more valiantly than they. They brought 
a telling indictment in turn against war, frenzied fin- 
ance, oppression, child labor, and personal vices. Ten- 
nyson sees clearly one of the grave faults of his century 
and of ours when he says:— 

"Is it well that while we range with Science, glorying in the Time. 
City children soak and blacken soul and sense in city slime? 
There among the glooming alleys Progress halts on palsied feet. 
Crime and hunger cast our maidens by the thousand on the street. 
There the Master scrimps his haggard seamstress of her daily bread, 
There a single sordid attic holds the living and the dead. 
There the smouldering fire of fever creeps across the rotted floor, 
And the crowded couch of incest in the warrens of the poor." 

America, also, furnishes splendid examples of the 
vital influence of poetry. As national teachers, as fore- 
runners of reform, our poets accomplished a work which 
frees poetry from every charge of inefficiency and use- 
lessness. Their part in the anti-slavery agitation de- 
manded heroic virtues. "When, to be an abolitionist, 
was to be hated, they stood boldly for the righteous but 
unpopular cause. In fact our whole national history 
has been indelibly stamped by the songs of our poets. 

At the present time our great cause for alarm is not 



6 



THE CRESCENT 



the meagerness of production, but the total lack of ap- 
preciation of poetry. We must insist most emphatically 
on the necessity of wider reading and deeper apprecia- 
tion of the best work of the minstrels. 

A revival of interest in poetry will oppose effective- 
ly the materialism which threatens us. It will arrest 
our trend toward mechanical and routine methods of 
working and living. It will stem the destructive tide of 
commercialism. It will minister gently to a nation dis- 
turbed by social unrest. For poetry develops imagina- 
tion and feeling, leads man to nature and through nature 
to God; puts spirit above body; makes for religion; com- 
bats ecclesiasticism. It may well be doubted whether 
our nation will be either great or good if we continue 
wilfully to neglect to appreciate poetry— the greatest of 
the arts and the handmaid of religion. 

Poetry then, with its healing influence, must per- 
meate the nation's entire inner life. Let us give it a 
high place in all the institutions which vitally affect 
progress. Let the minister catch the poetic spirit of 
the Galilean and his message of harmony and beauty 
will appeal with renewed power to the modern world. 
Let the school realize the value of poetry and raise it at 
least to an equal rank with the scientific and utilitarian. 
Let the public library make a determined effort to sub- 
stitute for cheap fiction real literature, including the 
best poetry, which affects the masses when simple and 
vital. Let the home give to the Muses a high place 
among the house-hold gods. Let parent and teacher, 
librarian and minister unite in performing the supreme- 
ly important task of instilling the poetic influence into 
the whole life of the nation. May we not all rise to 
Richard Watson Gilder's conception of poetry when he 



THE CRESCENT 



7 



says of its spirit:— 

"He came so beautifully clad 

They could not see the strength he had. 

His eyes so gentle they not knew 

That violet beam could pierce them through. 

His voice so sweet how could they think 

Its music reached creation's brink? 

'Neath that young brow how could they deem 

All the world's wisdom, all its dream?" 

C. M. N. '11. 



The average student when he starts to college does 
not guess what a wonderful part good will has to play 
in the making of his success. He enters college life 
with all its first impressions,, and it is generally more 
than he can do to keep himself adjusted to the changing 
conditions for the first few months. When at last he 
does get settled down to the regular routine life; study 
and recite, study and recite, he finds it much like the 
kind of school life he is accustomed to. There is per- 
haps a little more freedom of choice here. 

In the social side of college life it is different. He 
is not accepted upon first appearance as he always has 
been before. Here he must have real merit. He must 
show that he is worth while. And here is where the 
value of good will comes in. Good will compels recogni- 
tion. Especially among his fellow students will he find 
this true. Even members of the faculty size him up by 
this quality largely. He will also find it a very valuable 
asset in approaching them. 

Nor can we afford to discount its value in the busi- 
ness end of college life. And who is there who goes 
through a college coarse and does not have some kind of 
business experience? It is true good will has no fixed 



8 



THE CRESCENT 



value, especially financial value. But it is vital, and 
most of all to the student of limited means. The busi- 
ness man or employer has a keen eye for this quality, 
and is willing to pay for it. It has helped them up the 
ladder of success and will help them still farther. 

The student activities require good will in large in- 
stallments. It helps the athlete to keep his head in 
the practice and in the game. It gives him courage be- 
cause of its reaction. His fellows throw it back at him 
with interest and of course he is happy with them. Good 
will helps the orator to rejoice with the victor who has 
won fairly over him. It keeps the debater from becom- 
ing angry at his opponent who says sharp cutting things 
in the debate. 

In truth, good will is one of the greatest influences 
in our lives, and in most of us one of the least controled. 
What comes to us through it comes with the least ef- 
fort of all, and it certainly pays to try for it is some- 
thing we all possess. All it needs is use and it will 
grow rapidly. 

R. D. K. '11 



Colerftge. 



Anyone who reads Coleridge's biography, and studies 
his poems cannot but feel that a great and noble life has 
been stunted and almost ruined, but nevertheless we 
see and feel that his place as a poet is safe, and his 
niche in the famous galleries of English poets is secure. 

Most of his poems are threaded with a sad melan- 
choly which is due to his physical health. And because 
of his ill health he started using opium which was his 
ruin. 

Some of his poems are most beautiful because of the 



THE CRESCENT 



9 



comparisons and figures of speech. 

The best of his poems were written during the 
earlier part of his life, some of which will be known 
and read as long as literature lasts. For instance his 
"Kubla Khan" which he dreamed, and then wrote 
down, but before he had finished it he was interrupted, 
and was unable to remember the rest and had to finish 
it with something not the same as it had been. 

His poem in honor of Wordsworth is one of strength 
and beauty. And the tribute he gives him as sage, 
bard and teacher; as friend, comforter and guide is full 
of truth and love- 

The "Ode to Tranquility," and "Ode to Dejection," 
are also among his best, as is also "Frost at Midnight," 
but the one by which he will be longest and best known 
is "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner," which was sug- 
gested by Wordsworth, his brother poet, with whose 
name his own will forever be connected. 

They first met on a summer excursion, and Words- 
worth, in company with his sister, soon moved into the 
Coleridge neighborhood where these two great men en- 
joyed themselves in unrestrained intercourse; and here 
they communicated to each other their literary produc- 
tions. There it was that their best productions were 
written, and it is very touching to see Coleridge as he 
struggled so hard and bravely, at last so mastered by 
his dread enemy, opium, that his literary career was 
weakened and hampered. 

His touch of melancholy tenderness may prevent 
him attaining a very high place in the popular mind. 
His poetry does not possess the fiery pulse and humane- 
ness of Burns, but the wonderful perfection of his meter, 
and the subtle alliance of his thought and expression 
will always secure for him the warmest admiration of 
true lovers of poetry. M. P. C. '11. 



10 



THE CRESCENT 



jBpron. 

0 

Byron, the most idolized of the British poets, is also 
the most often misjudged. Some do not appreciate him 
because of what they deem his insufferable egotism. 
Others contrast the noble sentiments of his poetry with 
the notorious immorality of his actual life and accuse 
him of insincereity. But these are mistakes that come 
from a failure to understand him. 

As a boy Byron was morbidly sensitive because of a 
lame, mis-shapen foot. His wilful, passionate nature re- 
belled at the seeming injustice of Fate and he grew 
reckless and defiant Had Fate been kind to him that 
he should cringe before her meek and submissive? * ** 
Then his indomitable will asserted itself and he rose to 
the pinnacle of fame at a single bound. The world sud- 
denly opened out before him and knowing no restraint 
but the dictates of his own imperious will he reveled in 
its hollow pleasures. But if a genius, he was after all 
human — intensely human— and he felt the bitter stings 
of shame and remorse for a misspent youth with the 
same intensity that he felt life's pleasures. When he 
stopped a moment in his mad weaving of destiny and 
viewed the tangled web he had wrought, his lonely tor- 
tured soul gave utterance to those earnest regrets and 
exalted hopes that characterize so much of his poetry. 
We find no lack of sincerity, and there is no egotism in 
the wail of this sin-swept, passion-tossed soul striving 
to be strong and manly. He must have been sincere in 
this high endeavor for no one can long cherish evil and 
retain his finer feelings and ideals. Byron's ideals were 
never more exalted than at the last and his genius nev- 
er shown with greater brilliance. For when searing 
blasts and winter snows have quelled the hot impetuos- 
ities of turbulent youth, then from the tempered soul of 
the poet the notes ring clear and true! C. S. '12 



THE CRESCENT 11 



THE CRESCENT. 



Published Monthly during the college year by Student Body 



Claude M. Newlin, '11, Editor-in-Chief. 

Chris Smith, '12, Associate Editor 

Leo B. Kyes, Acad. Exchanges 
Bernice Benson '14 
Clifford Hadley Acad. 

Victor Rees '12, Business Manager. 

Leo B. Kyes, Asst. Business Manager. 



Terms, 75c. a Year in Advance. Single <"*opy 10c. 



We students of Pacific College have every reason to 
rejoice because we are now enjoying the benefits of a 
new building. The new building in itself should make 
us glad of heart and secure to Pacific a future career of 
increased usefulness. But can we not see behind this 
building something which means even more to the insti- 
tution? The telling sacrifice of time, work and money 
tell us eloquently of a backing in men and women which 
is more vital to the college than the material property 
which it owns. We students are infinitely indebted to 
the people who make possible the very existence of the 
college and its improvements. Hence it would be base 
ingratitude for us to mis-use or to fail to use what has 
been made possible by loving sacrifice. 



Locals. 



12 THE CRESCENT 




If there is a blue pencil mark in the circle you 
will know your subscription is still unpaid. Get 
busy. 



Stfjletu &atti. 



The Tennis Association has been re-organized, sev- 
eral new members having joined. The courts have 
been plowed and will soon be ready for use. 

At a recent athletic meeting it was decided to have 
base-ball instead of track sports this year. Chris Smith 
was elected manager. A letter was read which invited 
us to join the newly formed Willamette Valley Baseball 
league, but as we have had no baseball team for sever- 
al years we thought it best to stay out. A good crowd 
is turning out and we hope to make Pacific proud of her 
baseball team. 



THE CRESCENT 



13 



JJetoai of fye College. 



Anybody wishing pictures of the new building, like 
on the front page, can get them from Kyes. We have 
only a limited number of them so you had better get 
your order in. 2 for 5 cents. 

The Academy students have organized a literary soci- 
ety for the coming term. Albert Pearson was elected 
president; Mead Elliott, Vice President; Jean Denovan, 
secretary; Harry Haworth, treasurer; Paul Lewis, mar- 
shal. 

Prof. Johnson very vividly described in chapel the 
San Francisco earthquake which occurred while he was 
a student at Stanford. 

The public recital held in the new chapel Thursday 
evening, March 9th, was unceremoniously broken up by 
the occurance of a fire in town which made it necessary 
to cut off the lights. It was successfully given, how- 
ever, on the following Monday. 

Prof. Reagan attended quarterly meeting at Salem 
February 17th, 18th and 19th. 

Jean D. (at dinner table) I'm going to be an M. D. 

Miss Beck. M. D. stands for mule driver. 

Harvey W. I guess that's right. She drives Jack 
around here all the time. 

Rev. Weaver spoke in chapel February 7. He gave 
an excellent talk on some recent inventions and their 
inventors. 

A holiday was granted Wednesday, February 22, 
in honor of "the Father of our country." 

Miss Blanche Ford, pastor of the Friends church at 



14 



THE CRESCENT 



Salem, conducted exercises twice during the past month 
and held several meetings for the Y. W. C. A. 

The following social functions have been given re- 
cently. On February 24th the 1st year Academy stu- 
dents entertained the 2nd year students in the college 
building. On Friday, February 17th, the second year 
class entertained the other Academy classes and the 
faculty at a camping party in the Association Room. At 
the home of Miss Gladys Hannon the Freshmen enter- 
tained the Sophomores on the evening of February 24th. 

Mr. "Wightman, an evangelist of the Baptist church, 
spoke in chapel several times lately. His talks were on 
various phases of college life and we hope to profit by 
his suggestions. 

We are now well established in the new building 
having begun operations there on Monday, March 6. 
On the preceeding Thursday and Saturday the students 
worked loyally in making the new building ready for 
use and moving the furniture and library from the old 
hall. 

Mrs. Dr. Denovan, of Victoria, B. C, visited here 
several days with her son and daughter, Jack and Jean. 
She also brought her son Joshua and his friend, Paul 
King, to enter school. 

The fans are back on the base-ball diamond now 
that the weather is fit for out-door sports. The outlook 
is bright for a good team this spring. 

The annual election of the Y. M. C. A. was held 
March 16. Claude Lewis was elected president; Olin 
Hadley, Vice President; Ellis Pickett, Secretary; Harry 
Haworth, Treasurer. 



THE CRESCENT 



15 



(Exchange*. 



The Collegian, Waynesburg, Pa., a new cover design 
would be a decided improvement to your paper. 

The Toka, Grants Pass, is a very well arranged 
paper. The exchanges though few are well edited. 

Boomer, you emphasize your literary department in 
the proper spirit. Your papers would reach their des- 
tination in much better shape if put into envelopes, in. 
stead of being rolled. 

The Maroon and White, Wardner, Idaho. Advertise- 
ments are all right if kept in the right place but most 
assuredly should not be on the front page. 

Aerolith, Plymouth, Wis., Your February cover de- 
sign is very appropriate. 

The Clarion, Salem, Oregon, is especially efficient 
along literary lines. The departments are all well or- 
ganized. 

School Mirror, Wilbur, Wash- Your February issue 
is a decided improvement over the preceeding ones. 

The Earlhamite, Richmond, Indiana, nineteen pages 
of ads and only sixteen pages of literary work do not 
show up well for any college paper. 

The poets of the Philomath College Chimes, have gotten 
busy. Keep it up, Chimes. 

We have also received the following exchanges: 

Penn Chronicle, Oskaloosa, Iowa 

The Review, McMinnville, Oregon 

The News, Eugene, Oregon 

Franklin Academy Mirror, Franklin, Nebraska 

Guilford Collegian, Guilford, North Carolina 



THE CRESCENT 



Gates Index, Neligh, Nebraska 

Kodak, Everett, Washington 

The Nautilus, Washington, Illinois 

The Whirlwind, Albany, Oregon 

P. U. Weekly Index, Forest Grove, Oregon 

The Cardinal, Portland, Oregon 

0. A. C. Barometer, Corvallis, Oregon 

University Life, Witicha, Kansas 

The Dragon, Hong Kong, China 

Earlham Press, Earlham, Indiana 



We Are Proud of 
Our $1 a Day Offer 

We say to you: "If your Royal Tailor 
Suit isn't Completed on 6-day Schedule 

Time, we will pay you $1.00 a day for each 
day's delay." 

And we are proud of that offer. Because it 
proves the wonderful efficiency of the organ- 
ization that makes Royal clothes. 

The Royal Tailors guarantee the cloth you 
pick; the workmanship; the construction; the 
material that goes into your garment; the fit 
and shape holding qualities— and even the day 
of delivery is backed up by $1.00 a day forfeit. 

We have one of the handsomest displays of 
exclusive Spring woolens ever shown in this 
country— the latest and smartest cloth innova- 
tions. A call obligates you to nothing— and 
we think we'll both be mighty glad that you 
come. At any rate come in and get acquainted. 



W. B. Fine Company 

806 East First Street 



Newberg Steam Laundry 

When it is rainy weather and you cannot dry your clothes at 
home send them to the Newberg Steam Laundry 

G. L. ORR, Proprietor. 

C. C. !Peery, Uhe ^Druggist, 

has Perfumes and Toilet articles. 1 
Johnson's Chocolates. 
Come in and sample them. 

Next door to P. O. 



Mistress— "Has that fisherman frog legs?" 

Maid.— "I don't know, mum, he had on long 
pants." 



Hodson Bros. Clothing Store 

Headquarters (or 

The best grade of Clothing 
Shoes and Furnishings 



Newberg Cafe & Candy Kitchen 

Steaks, Chops, Oysters and Shell Fish at all hours 
Catering to College parties our Specialty 

All Our Candies Made Fresh Daily 



A. E. WILSON 

| --Jeweler- 
watches, Clocks, Jewlry stint «flv«rwar« 

Tom: A great author once said, "Never write 
upon an empty stomach." 

Bill: I should say not, paper is so much better. 
—Ex. 

THE FAIR 

5-10-15-25 Cent Store 

716 First St. 

Household Necessities. Imported and do- 
mestic China. Novelties all sorts and kinds 
We are here to stay. 

"Watch us grow." 

WALLACE*. SON, Props. 



2/amhill Sieoiric Co, % 



furnish 



Lfgf&t and Powe* • 

STUDENTS 

For the easiest shave and most up-to-date haircut go to 
JAMES McGUIRE Opposite P. 0. 



I 



CHAS. COBB | 

French Dry Cleaning and Repairing. Suit orders taken. % 

J. L. VanBla*icom 

Dealer in Fancy and Staple Groceries 

Free Delivery. Both Phones 

I Carry a Full Line of Jewelry 

My motto: "Prompt Work, Reasonable Prices." 

CHAS. A. MORRIS, Opposite P O. 
For a Slick Shave and Artistic Haircut 

TRY F. E. VESTAL'S BARBER SHOP 

East of U. S. Natl. Bank of Newberg. 
All parties treated alike F. E. VESTAL, Prop. 



PRESCRIPTION DRUGGIST 

Drugs, Books, School Supplies. Etc. 
THE REXALL STORE 

CLARENCE BUTT 

ATTORNEY-AT-LAW 
Office upstairs in Union block 

One day an Irishman was seated in the wait- 
ing-room of a station with an odorous pipe in his 
mouth. One of the attendants called his atten- 
tion to the sign: "No smoking." 

"Well," said Pat, "I'm not a-smokin'." 

"But you have a pipe in your mouth." 

"Shure, an' I've shoes on me feet an' I'm not 
walking 

The United States National 
Bank of Newberg 

Newberg, Oregon 

Resources Oct. 8, 1909 $271,896.03 
Resources Oct. 8, 1910 394,070.97 
Increase for 12 months 122,174.94 

We respectfully solicit your account 

J. L. HOSKINS, Pies J. C. COLCORD. Cashier 
S L. PARRETT, V Pres WE CROZER. Asst Cash 



Uhe €. JRf. Spaulding <£og. Co, 

Manufacture their own Lumber 



Lath jf 1 ^ _____ Shingles 



Doors ^^^^ V Windows 




Plaster ^jjj Jff Mouldings 

and ca ry in stock a full line of building Material 



Hannon's Millinery Parlor 

Hats made to order. Latest styles. 
Pric s reasonable. 



Benson's News Stand 

Subscription agency for all magazines and papers, with a line of books, 
including Bibles. If we don't have what you want will order it 

First National Bank of Newberg 

Comer First and Washington Sts. 

Transacts a General Banking Business and respectfully solicits your 
patronage. 

J. D. GORDON, Pres. L. G. KNEESHAW, Cashier 

W. A. KING Vice Pres. 



Siradley Studio 

Successor to *Dougla$ 

Our pictures are first class and up to date. Best 
of materials used. Satisfaction guaranteed. 

Oliver Roller Skating Rink 

A good long evening of wholesome 
exercise for 
25 CBNTS 

NASH & FINLEY 

Ladies Furnishings, 

Shoes and Notions. 

Miller Mercantile Company , 

Newberg's Leading Dry Goods and 
Clothing House, Grocery and Shoe 
Store 



TlJ. 7l/. Collingsworth 6c Son 

Dealers in * 

Carpets, Wall Paper and Furniture % 
Undertakers % 
Newberg, Oregon Z 

A. M. DAVIS, Dentist. I 

Office over TJ. S. National Bank f 

Both Phones | 

J. F. Taylor 

Flour, Feed, Seeds, Poultry Supplies 

Bell phone 267, Mutual Black 4 Residence phone Black 2 

Bell phone Main 261 Home Black 1 14 

Hitchen Mercantile Co. 

Dealers in 

Staple and Fancy Groceries, Hand Painted China 
Crockery and Glassware 



h H. WILL 

Does all kinds of Shoe Repairing 

LOCATED IN BALES OLD PLACE 

ffirownj the Uailor 

Suits at your own price Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing 
2 doors west of pontoflice 

HALE & COMPANY 

Dry Goods, Shoes, Ladies Suits 
and Coats — Hosiery, Notions, 
Etc. Etc. 



1* 



E. C. BAIRD 



General Merchandise 

HEADQUARTERS FOR 

Students Shoes, Furnishing Goods, Etc 

PACIFIC COLLEGE 

Is a Living, Growing, Aggressive, Up-to-date Institution 
The courses offered are well arranged 

Thorough and honest work required 



< ► Well prepared and scholarly faculty in charge. Surround- 

< \ ings cheerful, delightful, inspiring. Associations elevating. 
\ \ The object sought is a broad and a thorough training and 

< ► the development of cultured Christian character For infor- 
\ \ mation address 

I W. J. REAGAN, Acting President 



Kienle & Sons 

A complete line of Stationery and School Supplies, Post 
Cards, Etc Pianos, Phonographs, Sheet Music 
and Musical Supplies 
First Street Newberg. Oregon 

E. O. VAN OSDOL 

Opera Confectionery 

Carries a full line of Fresh Candies, Fruits, Drinks, 
Stationery and Magazines. 



Automobiles 

Motor cycles, Bicycles, and Sundries. 

Sporting Goods of all kinds 

Guns said Ammunition, Baseball and Tennis Goods, Cutlery and Razor?. 
Extra Razor Blades. Umbrella and Parsols. 
Repairing of all kinds neatly done 

Jno. N. Crosby & Co. 



% Sweet's Confectionery 

Fruits, Nuts, Candies, Soft Drinks, etc. 
Successor to J. M. Rittenhouse 



% Walter H. Whitten \ 

* 0 

% Lapidary and Jeweler 

f Precious Stones Cut and Mounted. Agate Work a Specialty. 

^ Box 42, Newberg, Ore. <T 



Watch for Grand Opening 
of the 

Tfew Star TJheatre 

Special Selected Program 
Singing and Music